A Library of Unreadable Things: “The Art of the Book” at Seager Gray Gallery

Artsy Editors

May 5, 2014 1:16 pm

For
nine years running, Seager Gray Gallery has presented “The Art of
the Book,” an annual, bibliophilic exhibition that transforms the space
into a library of sorts—where none of the books can be read. No settling into a
good book here. The 26 artists participating in this year’s iteration of what
the gallery calls a “labor of love,” celebrate, explore, and complicate the
experience of reading, and our relationship to books, by breaking every good
librarian’s rules. They have cut, torn, bent, folded, molded, painted, and
otherwise transformed books into an inventive assortment of objects,
sculptures, and wall pieces, which promise to unsettle, and, ultimately, enrich
our understanding of these valued sources of knowledge and pleasure.

Beginning
with the basics, Renee Billingslea provides viewers not
necessarily with a dictionary, but with Dic-Shoe-naries (2013). She has
carved a pair of dapper men’s loafers out of Webster’s tome, whose absurdly
high soles emphasize the huge number of words in reference volumes. In keeping
with the content of the books she alters, Barbara Wildenboer slices guides for gardening
and to the flora in her native South Africa into thriving, plant-like pieces in
her “Dark Paradise” series (2013). The pages of texts with titles like The
Gardener in South Africa appear as tendrils, whose delicacy belies their
strength: pushing their way through binding, they grow wildly beyond the
cover’s edges, flouting the would-be gardener’s efforts to tame nature. Andrew Hayes, on the other hand, bends
books to his will in his minimalist wall-mounted sculptures, Union and Furrow
(both 2014). Combined with pieces of steel, the books are molded into
gracefully curving, abstract forms, with the word-speckled edges of their
layered pages serving as a softer foil to the hard surfaces they hug.

Doug Beube, whose Kylix Series:
Reason S (2014), a chopped-up copy of The Dreams of Reason, is
included in the exhibition, once described his approach to each of the books
with which he works as archeological or medical. “Like a physician or an
archaeologist,” he stated, “I am driven to examine it, to dissect it, to cut it
open, to dig into it.” As are all of the artists in The Art of the Book,
who take us deep beneath the covers.